President Obama Appeared on ‘Late Night with Jimmy Fallon'; Slow-Jammed the News [VIDEO]

President Obama appeared on “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” Tuesday night – shot at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, for a live audience of primarily college students, it was the first stop in the president’s visit to a significant swing state that went blue for the first time in more than 30 years during the 2008 election.

Those hoping to attend waited in line for hours in the rain for tickets, days before the taping. People who didn’t make the cut, according to Fallon, were “students, professors and Joe Biden.”

Fallon and Obama began their stint by “slow jamming the news,” a regular segment on the show, set to a blues jam by Fallon’s house band, the Roots.

The interview continued with a mix of light-hearted banter and a few probing questions for the president, who briefly addressed the current Secret Service scandal when questioned by Fallon.

The president, an admitted fan of the Tar Heels, threw out a few college-centric jokes, poked fun at his former “afro” when Fallon revealed a photo of him from his college days, and tapped further into his agenda to reduce interest rates on student loans. Obama commented that he and the First Lady, Michelle Obama, “didn’t finish paying off all of our student loans until about 8 years ago, and I’m president of the United States.”

The more serious points of discussion revolved around Obama’s plans to promote college education by reducing student debt, as well as his ongoing energy policies.

On Mitt Romney, Obama’s presumptive Republican challenger in the November general election, the president said, “We’re not friends; his wife is lovely,” and he “seems like somebody who cares about his family.”

For the most part, it seemed the audience was receptive of the president.

Cameron Parker, a UNC senior and former opinions editor with The Daily Tarheel, said, “People were really stoked by the president. Personally, I think one of the biggest highlights was seeing the president in a less formal setting. He was definitely in politicking mode, but we got to catch him in a more laid back and humorous setting.”